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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1920)
XT V V THE -BEE: -OMAHA. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1920. The Omaha-Bee DAIIY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publisher.. to rise in the east. But alas! so many never real ize it until the golden years of youth and all their opportunities are gone. '4 - MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS T Awneltttd Pnu. 01 wAlea T6 Baa n a man bar. t i t!ultlT aiUUtd to U um for nuhllritlon of all aaoa itmauhM rr4ltd la II or not oUurwtM cndlMd la lb It pspcr. ul alio tht mi am duduvim Brnn. Ail hen or pu&Uutiao of ou oposlal dltpoMMO tra olM nomad. . BEE TELEPHONES PrlMU Braneh drbun. Ai for lb IfWlfl Dptnmnt or Fwma tuM 17"r 1 WW For Nl.ht Call After 10 P. M.I tljer11 DmrtaKM ........... Trior I0WI rautAio iKMtMIt .......... TrltT 100DL odrwtlMiu Dtputaait ........... Tj)w lOOtL CouneU Bli Nt. Tort CaJaato ' OFFICES OF THE REE Mil Orfieo: 1U tod rraaa IS float! Nt I 5kmrlL Hiita ' Out-o-Towa O'Icmi mi R at tu rirtk a. Stanr Bid. Wublntton 1SII O it Pl Franco too BU Boson Jhe Bee8 Platform 17 Now Union Paaseagar SUljoa. 2. Continued improvement of tKa N. braika High way concluding the pave man! of Main Thoraughfaraa katftag into Omaha with a Brief Surfate. A. thert, low-rata Waterway front the Cora Bait to tha Atlantic Oceajw Home Rula Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Goverameat. 3. TEKEL ON THE COX TENT. Before the campaign is halt over it seems no exaggeration to say that Governor Cox is in the same deplorable plight which the last gbv- ' ernor of Babylon found himself when he had the captive Daniel brought before him to explain the famous handwriting on, the wall. Daniel interpreted one part of it as follows: "Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting." Is the parallel too strong to be justified? Would that it were I It is not pleasant to see a man, after nomination for the most exalted office in the republic, disclose traits of character which lead irresistibly to the conclusion that he is wanting in, the dignity, the justice, the mod eration," the mental poise, and the finer qualities which mark the American gentleman. But what shall be said when a candidate for president boasts publicly that at aycertain time and place he will furnish proofs that his political opponents are in a foul conspiracy to purchase the" presidency and failsfto do so? And after failure, instead of apology for his offense, con tinues to utter accusations'" against honorable men whose personal characters or public acts were never impeached? Governor Qox has done just that, charging penitentiary offenses against men of hithertcv , unquestioned character; even seeking to im plicate his opponent, Senator Harding, by charg ing him with, guilty knowledge of the "con spiracy." Then Mr. Cox's closest political as sociates, called on 'to back up. their candidate's charges, disclaims all knowledge of either guilt pr evil intent on the part of the gentlomen accused, who testify under oath. to every questioned de tail of their political activities, fvhereupon Gov ernor Cox, himself dodging witness stand and cross-examination, calls them liars and per jurers. What has been the effect of such conduct? V T1 l. 1 1 - 1 , . . T- x wu icauus nave uccii ooscrvca: i. ueep re-. will take them to the polls early on election day; , 2. Marked decrease in friendliness "for Cox in influential newspapers over the country . that accepted his charges as true and now find themselves painfully embarrassed by lack of proof. i - i A tolerant people may be chagrined to find Governor, Cox in no sense profound as a thinker or student of fundamental political prin ciples; but it has another emotion when the character of American citizenship is a whole is slandered by the assumption that the Presi dency of the Republic can be .bought. Ak-Sar-Ben Welcomes His Guests., Once more the gates -of the city are open to admit the throngs who are coming to do homage to the" great and genial moViarch, King Ak-S.tr-Ben, whose patent of royalty is admitted, even by the most democratic of his subjects. His high and mightiness is not only a geniaUbut a jovial king, and if anybody doesn't have a good time in the capital city of the Kingdom of Quivera during the next two weeks, it will not be be cause his majestydias willed it so, or thatiiis servitors and retainers have been remiss in their preparations. ' One of the really big things will be the jn traduction of the multitude to the great grand stand and race course that have been constructed since the last festival. -These are but integers in the general plan fpr a great exposition to oe carried on unaer tne auspices ot Ak-bir-rJen Visitors .to Ak-Sar-Ben field will not.only W enienainea Dy sucn exnioiuons 01 .speecLjW are possible from horse, automobile and airplane, but may vision more clearly the future greatness of the institution. It is some year to celebrated InVJU the state's history its people , have never been, so prosperous; never has such yield of field and orchard, of herd and flock, blessed the husband man's efforts; never ha labor been so generally and so generously employed and recompensed; nor can merchant or banker ever look back on a season of greater activity or more certain return Therefore, Ak-Sar-Ben XXVI bids, his people come td his capital city and rejoice with him in the presence of the many and bounteous bless ings vouchsafed to them. -? s . . .. . ': ,'.. A Line 0' type gl Two 4(w to tin lOo. M tot tulH toll vhtn (A Bay. , , .A Movie Star's Night Out - , AnotheHdisturbing glimpse Jpto the habits -and desires of film stars has shocked th& public." Mrs. -Jack Pickford (Olive Thomas), young, beautiful, talented and popular, is dead in Paris, following a night of drinking and revelry in places beyond the pale of respectability. , Urged repeatedly "by her husband to , dis continue her dissipation, he rebuked her when she reached her hotel at 4 o'clock in the morn ing highly excited and stimulated. She went to her bathroom ,for medicine, got the wrong bottle, and drank enough poison to kill twenty five men. Her horror-stricken husband did everything Jiumanly possible to save her life, ' but she pissed on, and became another wan lerer among the shades' of all the generations. Meanwhile the public s becoming more and more suspicious of its him favorit ot tneir morality, of their habits, of their character. An overwhelming majority of patrons of moving picture houses have no desire to enrich unwor--thy, unclean actoVs and actresses, no matter how brilliant their performances. Are they all alike, these darlings of popularity? Do their enormous earnings corrupt them? Arethey all tarred with the same stick? These are the ques tions people are "asking, following the scandals, divorces, and sensational news which has come from movieland in the past few ponths. These shocking episodes of fast life have a direct bearing not only on the audiences of the future, but on the future sipply of talent for screen purposes. , The decent young woman hood of the country cannot afford to sell their reputations for success iri a, profession rife with abominations. Where Does the League Come In? V A rather significant statement is attributed to M. Millerand, French premier, in closing an iiw tcrview after conference with bignor Uiolotti, Italian premier. "He is credited with having said Great Britain and France at San Remo and myself before and after San Remo have stated that neither Great Britain nor France. has tb right tol interfere between two parties' when a question! concerns them alone. . This, io be sure, specifically applies to the dis turbed relations between Poland and the Soviets, between I Italy, and the Tugo-Slavs, between Greece Jnd Turkey, between China and Japan and so on. It is, however, capable of indefinite extension, and indicates an inclination on part of at least two of the great 'powers (and un doubtedly Italy assents) to allow the adjustment of differences between nations to proceed much as they did before the League of Nations came into existence. " v " For remember, the League of Nations .does exist, with twenty-eight nations as members. The leaders, have set aside Articles X and XI, and are agreed between tnemseives iot 10 f in terfere bctweenAvo parties When a question concerns them alone." . ' ; Last week Candidate Cx pledged himself 'to the Irish that he would take the question before-"fhe supreme council of the super-nation as soon as elected. - Read M. Millerand's state ment again, and figure out how.far the United States government would be successful in secur ing a hearing for Ireland against English oppo sition, short of an actual declaration of waf. The SanRemo conference appears tp have un done all' that was planned at Paris, but it has left the United. States in a position stronger than ever for the protection of its own interests,, with .freedom of action for the future whijh, must mean good because our government is not entangled in the intrigues tha are proceeding in Europe at the moment. 1 ' Heading for Nowhere. A Chicago merchant who does business in the stock yards district' testified last week that young men from 17 to 24 years of age have been buying silk shirts at $16 to $18 eacTi, $50 suits and $10 shoesXThe 'merchant said: "These are the. same young men who formerly paid $L50 for shirts, $15 for a suit of clothes, and $3 for shoes." Poor fellows. They are on the straight road to nowhere. Like them is the family living on $25 a week, starts spending $50 a week, when its head's wages reach that point. They belong to the great "Living It All Up" cluo. When sickness hits the members of this club they change their social status and unite with, the "Always in Debt" club. They never get along. It is the family or the young man who, when a raise in wages or salary comes( keeps on liv ing in the same modest way, and puts the raise in bank every pay day, that is owning a nice little home in a few years, with aVgarden and some fruit trees. And in twenty years or so people say: "They're doing well, saving money and educating their children." The man who saves cannot be- kept down. sure to rise in the world as the sun is. Farmers and the Republican Policies. The customarily astute New York Times overshoots the mark when it undertakes to dis till comfort out cf the reception accorded Gov ernor Cox in North Dakota. Go"lng baclto the time when Theodore Roosevelt was on a ranch in the Little Missouri courUry, the Times seeks to create an analogy between his views of prov gressivism and those of the present democratic candidate, to the detriment of the republican party in general, and of Senator Harding .in par ticular. In so doing the writer but exhibits his lack of understanding of the habits of thought in Jhe great grain belt. ",. Consider for a moment Kansas, Nebraska, South and North Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Wis consin and Illinois. These states have long been regarded as reliably "republican in tendency. Also they have been progressive. They con stitute the heart of the grain belt. .Their people are- intelligent, industrious, thrifty. When the, war came on they furnished their quota of men swiftly and surely, the finest specimens offered coming from these states; they gained less than any othe,r states in the union In the matter of "war profits. They went shorthanded into the great struggle of making the soil produce more than the food needed to win the war wOuld be forthcoming. No group of states in the union presents a finer record than these. , Yet, in 1918, when Woodrow Wilson appealed to the country that only democrats be placed on guard, these states rebuked him by electing republicans. They were following Theodore Roosetelt then, and we believe they will follow him again by voting for Warren G. Harding, who 'more nearly represents the! things which Roosevelt fought than any democrat may ever hope to do and. yet retain hisss.tanding in J that party of reaction. Cox has not conquered ' any new votes in the grain belt. That man who erected a s5gn on a vacant lot near Chevy Chase, saying "The hite House will be built here," took it down when an officer told him the president did not like it. He f aid "Well, I ' nevef'expect to . see another democratic president in the White House, and I am perfectly willing to extend a farewell cour tesy to thB one;" The independent and non-partisan paper con tinues to be the most intensly partisan of all on occasion. Its non-partisanship is only for-the periods between campaigns, in which it assumes an attitude of superior virtue and intelligence which it regards as admirable, but which is jn fact Pecksniffian. - George Creel's more or less valuable and re liable publicity bureau, opened when. Wilson de cided, the press untrustworthy, cost' .the, tax payers $4,954,000. t " . : , A YOUNG'nian inquires, of us totnow what equipment. is necessary. for the fob of literary critic. This is a' large order, which we will not attempt to fill. But we, can assure the'young mannai he cannot do tetter tharf start.with the two pronouncements "Thi- book will add noth ing to the author's reputation" and "This author will go far, and I shall read everythinghe pub lished," -" . - Wisconsin Politeness. Sir: Tourists, . commeYclal and otherwise, who may inadvertently waljc on the grass sur rounding the 6auk County Court House; are Ele gantly warned by signs readlr.g: , "s : ,' Ton lc on look better in the cement. s. . - - . 4,2, Jrv. THE headline, "Finds a Husband on. Golf Links," reminds us pf the lady who observed sagely: 'There is one good thing about jtolf. You Iways know where your husband is." ' In Which the Prowess of tho Boys In BohH Is f Stirringly1 Set Forth. , (From the Winona, Minn.. Republican-Herald.) xjkut airs: in regards 10 tne uonris val ley dance raid Sunday night -John Ernst . Marshall got hurt with a bottle arid PVoprie- ror got a Dottle Dy a reilow by the name, of Wheeler and there cars were station a-half ' mile from the jlace so they could leave In a hurry. John Beck laying 3 out of the Ave coia Jn rront or himlki the noer taking care o of the fellow that hit him with the bottle 1 and gave him so much that .they had to carry him away. John Ernst sending one out through the door at one blow. , One of the four from Bohris vally Boys through them away frpm being two many for jobn Besk and the other one a soldier, strained to the. gloves, took theme far handed and they jrent down every time and every one '' that was licked found the door they came In themost of th boys in the fight were from Winona for party at the dance knew them as f r they were In Dodge before and had Lilly sa- - loon for- themselves for two hours and done what they wanted but they got fooled when they got tovBchris valley. They were only 4 good men John Ernst, John Beck Proprie tor andt a State Soldier frorh Camp Shilby J Miss, and another Bohris valley Boy, 5 Minnesota men that came in Minn, cars were badly hurt S were mostly hit 2 or 3 that there' left for the door being about 25 in the fight this is the true .wrote by 'a readenf the paper and a man that seen the - hold light the were licked in a few minutes. . ; x a Friend. "SPLENDID, Eats and Lawful Sheets" is the slogan of the Hotel Davis in Sullivan Ind. "!ijhe second adjectives, we rush to explain al ludes' to the length and breadth of the covering. IF YOU DON'T LIKE BUTTERMILK HERE'S v YOUR COW. . (From the Henryetta, 6k!., 'Free Lance.) For Safe Jersey cow giving six gallons of milk a day and two lbs. of butter. 805 Ragan. . ';'(.. - V AS the train, slipped out of the tube and plunged into the Long Island landscape the pleasant-faced old gentwho shared our seat in troduced the topic as suddenly as a camel from the blue. We learned that prohibition did not affect him personally, as he could get all the drink he wished for; it was the principle ofthe thing that grareled him.' He began estimating the number of men that prohibition had thrown out employment, and multiplying the number by five,f n order to arrive at the grand total of persons' affected. "Nice country this?' said he, looking out of the window; "an agreeable change from Chicago." h, are you tronv Chicago?" sezze. I lived there twenty-tour years. 1 used to run the Palmer House.", i , WHXT THIS COUNTRY JEEDS.'l ' "(From the Topeka Capital.)' .. r . P.ecently a "front office" man showed an ' out-of-town lady throughqne of the largest ' manufacturing plants in the city. SheWas : ' an Interested and . Intelligent observer'' and ', the'rmyi did his best to explain things as he went along. When the tour of the plant was finished the lady said, 'Thank you very, ' very. -much! Let me express jny apprecia tion by asking you to .buy yourself a good cigar," and she ofterefl a coin. It was aji nickel. x - f - j . WE did not trouble to adjust our sun dial to the daylight-saving schedule this year, asthe last time we moved-it we got it out oforder, and it has been five minutes' slow ever.sine?. ' Literature and the AdYertiser (J. C. Squires, Booka in General.") S One of the worst advertisements -i have ever seen is before me, It is headed with a well known portrait of' Keats: chosen possibly . be cause It is the-one in which the poet is holding his head, a common practice with those who are out of sorts. Then follows the advertise ment: . , A OREAT POET v, AND A GREAT TONIC. Then felt I like some watcher of the skies When a new planet swims into his ken; Or like stout Cortez, when with eagle eyes -He stared at; the Pacific and all his men Look'd 'at each other with a wild surmise- Silent, upon' a peak in Darieff. j What a bracing effect there is in such Unes! (The pity of It, thatihe writer died at 2 5. They send the blood aloKjg the veins with an 'added glow. Supplement this with Pink Rhomboids, the Reliable T6nlc. They enrich, the blood and increase the number of your red corpuscles- the Army Service corps of the body. DID the advertising dodge of w;hiMi the fore going is a horrible example originate in Eng land? Probably, tor t is only recently that we have noticed equally horrible examples of it in this country. 1 .; A PATENT cigarette lighter that works is 'offered by D. S. C. fot an authentic instance of anybody laughing up his sleeve. Buwho wants a p. c. 1. even if it works? . HOWEVER Sir: A 16-oz. bottle of home-made hootch with a 60, per cent recoil to the bird who can provide an authentic instance of anybody put ting a vest poejeet kodak into his" vest pocket. i W. J.JE. ADMIRERS of W. fl. Hudson and none knows him but to love him will want his "Birds and Man," which Knopf has brought out this year. We were pleasantly surprised to learn from Comrade Knopf that the best selling book on hs liists.was Hudson's Gren Mansions." on his lists was Hudson's Green Mansions." , How to Keep Well By DR. W. A.' EYATJS Question concerning byfleno, sanlta tioa and prevention of dWoate, oub mlttod to Dr. Evaao by roadoro of Tho Boo, wtH bo anoworod porooaally, sub . joct to propor limitation, vbcra a tamped, addrotoed 'onvalopo ia on cloood. Dr. Evana wttT not maka dlaanoais or prescribe for individual dtaoatea. Addreoa letters in cars of Tbo Bee. Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W.yA, Evans. 4 TICKS SPREAD SPOTTED FEVER. Iri Montana ther have a disease which has Jong been a mystery to physicians For instance, it,i was prevalent and very fatal on one slope of the Bitter Root valley, but Is not found on the opposite side. In east ern Montana it is a mild disease; in western Montana a severe one. It is known as Kocky mountain spotted lever. s Many expeditions have gone Into me country souta or Missoula to study it, nd seweraKpf the scientists who haye undertaken to 'stu,dy it haye paid for their enthusiasm with their lives. Gradually facts are be ing accumulated, and out of these some day will come discovery of a method of eradicating if? Cases of it have been found In Montana, Washington, Idaho, Ore gon, Wyoming, Nevada. California. , I TT..I. .. 1 J - f. . L T 1 Jt is not limited to one side of the Bitter Root valley, as was thought a few years ago. It is known that it is spread by ticks. It differs from most insect borne diseases in that the insect is nnt a rtneisiv'A 'pnrrior Kur ani-t'o. ga a Nreservoir host. It is found not only in the. tick but in the eggs of tle tick,- and even in the ovum out of which the egg develops. It is a truly inheritable disease of 'ticks. ' These ticks get or larger stock, but this is early in the spring, nxl they feed, fall oil and deposit their eggs in the soil before (these large animals are moved out of the coun try. Probably the infected ticks are spread more by rabbits and pvairie dogs than by larger animals. This is the explanation of the slow spread of the disease made by Dr. AVolbach of Harvard, who went to Montana last year to help-the state board of nettiin muuy gponea ieverr 4i j TERPSICHORE IN MISSOURI. . (From the Lynn County Budget.) T.h0 popular girls at the dances usually have to SDend""most of the next dav clean- " - ing the hoif prnits rom their white shoes. TOUCHIN' on slogans. M. E. C. would like to use" one that he haooened on while read ing Byron': "The Devil was the first Democrat." , B. L. T. Shows HerHand. "Show 'Your Hand to All the World." a headline advises. Tell it to the girl, with a new engagement ring. Milwaukee Journal There's A Season. How frequently these days a. candidate feels led upon in his speech to mention his wife.-- called Detroit News.' Nebraska's corn crop 4s going up in- figures at every report. Better -get it into the crib, or, the state won't hold it Old King Ak is just around the corner;, get ready to welcome him. . x - ... v. .' What has beqome of F. Roosevelt T , . " Worse and Worse. . Life hangs by a slender thread. If you.es cape the feudist there still are the foodists. Detroit New. , ; Most Satisfactory of A1K "Anticipation," remarked the man on the car, "is a wonderful place to soend-.a vacation." Toledo B)ade. , ItV Different Now. ,( Remember, the Hong ago when the .little girl looked forward to young ladyhood and the time for putting on long skirts? Nashville Ban ner, - . ' ' Wolbach 1 is convinced the germ which causes the disease has been discovered. He found it in infected ticks and in their eggs, and he failed to find it in noninfected ticks. He was able to produce fhe disease by the bite of infected ticks. There may be some large animal which has the disease and which in fects the ticks, but such, animal has not been discovered. A man with Rocky mountain spotted fever is not a source of dapger to those about hfm, because tick bite is the source of . infection, just as a man can have yellow fever or malaria in "a ward where there are susceptible men witfiout endangering any one provided there are no mosquitoes ;to transmit the infection. It will not be many years before some .one will discover an additional factVor two which, added to what is "already known, will make it possible to wipe out this disease. ' ( Stock Dividends. VUehling, Neb.. Sept. 10. To, the Editor of The Bee: You would oblige me very much by answering the following question: Before the decision of the United States supreme court relative to In come tax on stock dividends, what was this tax levied upn and by whom paid? Does the new ruling exempt tho corporation from all in come taxes or does the corporation still pa the corporation income tax en its net income before any distri bution of profits have been made? . F. II. Answer: It, was ruled under the original income tax law that stock dividends were assessable as income, the tax to pe paid either "at source" or by the individual. Appeal was taken from ftiis ruling of the com missioner atd the court held that stock dividends are not assessable as such. As at present construed," the law lays no tax on surplus converted into stock and distributed as such, as it is merely a change in form of capital employed in business, and not an addition to or creation of any new wealthy However, earnings not distributed as dividends, but carried over into surplus and as Such used as capital employed are taxable as. earnings for the year in which they are accrued. - Related yo Eugene Field, Burwell, Neb., Sept. 8. To the Editor 'of The Bee; I have clipped for my scrapbook the short editorial "Sidelights on Eugene Field- be cause It is a standing joke in our family Our relationship to Eugene and the late Marshall Field:- a Joke, because xthe relationship is so far re moved. Here "it is: Eugene Field's great-great-great-grandmother ,was my great-great-great -grandfather's sister. Relief White, which brings to mind that I and my family are di rect descendants of Periagrim White,, whoj was born on the May flower. My great-grandmo,ther was Betsy White.' Hate other proofs re-' corded., Am very much interested in th celebration of the landing of the Pilgrims, which is to be at Omaha during Ak-Sar-Ben week. Hence this statement. MAUDE GOODENOW. A Habit Down There. Still, they think no more of It in Bolivia when a revolution breaks out than we would here of a case of measles. Detroit News. CIRCUMSTANCES ALTER " ASES. "There'o that nl(rhlior boy. a-Jumpia In my melon patch, a-thumpln' For tho ripe 'n', en' a-humpln'," Bald Cjr WtfSlne. Til arreet 4ut la It atealln'T Hain't 1 done the eame, a-kneelln. Many bo the time, a-feelln' For the bl 'n'e?" WILLIS HUDSPETH. TYPEWRITERS FOR RENT All Make Typewriter Co. 205 S. 18th Tylor 2414 . KOSPE CO. PIANOS TOTED 1ITD v BEPAWED -"411 Work Giaraa teed UUPotutliait TfJ.Dw.M. He's Young at 73 Years. C. S. H. writes: "1. I am a man 73 years old in excellent health. I walk from seven-to eight miled every dav.. reeardless of the weather; Is that t! far? I do my walking be fore breakfast every morning., I live principally on vegetables and fruits. I drink a pint j of milk with each meal. , I x . "2. Had I better cut that out and drink water? I drink a great deal of water throughout the day, but milk with my meals. "3. Is there any benefit to be de rived from deep breathing? 'If so, to what extent?" REPLY. 1. It is not. I assume it doesnot unduly fatigue you. 2. You do not need three pints of milk a day, but It is not harming you. Hindhede, a Danish scientist, attributes the excellent health of his people during the world war to the fact that they lived on milk, vegeta bles and whole grain bread. ' 3. Deep breathing exercises de velop your chest muscles. They warm your feet ,in cold weather. Otherwise they do little good. I hope you will reach 100. eSVhy not? Yes, She Can. -L. E. D. writes: "Could a young woman with a weak heart be the mother of children wjthout any se rious troble? REPLY. Yes. . You Might Use Your Mind. " E. J. J. writes: "I am a young married woman and am so anxious to overcome an extremely tiervous temperament. If dieting is necessary, will you kindly publish tha neces sary diet?" REPLY. . There is' no medicine which is of any particular benefit. Your trouble is mental and the cure lies in mental treatment. I suggest you get a copy of Sadler's "Worry and Nervousness" artd study it diligently, chapter by chapter. If you prefer to do so, ,go in for any- of the cults whichever one strikes your fancy. X ALL WEEK "VALUES Again the . Greater Bowen Store excels' in value-giving. Note' .these , smaller items, of which everypne needs a supply then come and secure your share. 5- Eleetrie Spark Soap Six bars, only . .St.. . , Defiance Cold Water 5tarch-r3 pkgs., only.. Shredded Wheat Bkfat. Food 2 pkgs. only Ideal Mop Sticks Llght.i strong and well finished, 0 1 at, each , 1 C Aema lea Cream Freeiera Freezes cream in three minutes and will be found so handy for 'the miking of the last- CCn minute' dessert, priced. . VuC Bbwen Brooms Supply ?oing fast get yours at once, Q Q 25c 25c 25c at Don't hesitate in accepting the values offered at , the 'Bowen store. You will truly be .sur prised at the wonderful amount of ' savings you receive when shopping at the store that is daily offering you something out of the ordinary something not just as good, but something better. -Get the habit of shop ping where there is always a saving to be' had. : v "business is coop thank you' LV Nicholas Oil Company Direct Mail , Advertising Joa B. Rodfield The best evidence of ability to produce results is proof of past accomplishment. Ask Mr. Loomis ofthe National Fur & Tanning Co. what K-B Service has done for them. V ; t v Planning, writing copyeWllustrating, printing, addressing, mailing "" "From the register." desire to sell clear to the cash K-B Printing Company : Redfield & Milliken Owners Printing Headquarters Harvey Millikea ' a I a (h a package mmm War a package, During the War. and a Package fiWJ ' - ' N The Flavor; Lasts So Does the Price! H i jy&g P 9 ) f ) N .1 f